| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
[FRT16a] Is There a Data Model in Music Notation?Conférence Internationale avec comité de lecture : (TENOR'16) International Conference on Technologies for Music Notation and Representation, May 2016, pp.85-91, Series Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, UK, (DOI: 978-0-9931461-1-4)Mots clés: Digital Score Library, Score Model, MusicXML, MEI, XQuery
Résumé:
Scores are structured objects, and we can therefore envisage operations that change the structure of a score, combine several scores, and produce new score instances from some pre-existing material. Current score encodings, however, are designed for rendering and exchange purposes, and cannot directly be exploited as instances of a clear data model supporting algebraic manipulations. We propose an approach that leverages a music content model hidden in score notation, and define a set of composable operations to derive new â€scores†from a corpus of existing ones. We show that this approach supplies a high-level tool to express common, useful applications, and can easily be implemented on top of standard components.
Commentaires:
http://tenor2016.tenor-conference.org/
BibTeX
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||